SEO or AEO? Why you’re not showing up in AI answers (yet)
This is a consolidation of findings from Neil Patel and Hubspot plus what we have found to work well on our own website.
Most business owners are still playing the old game.
Some aren’t playing at all.
They’re thinking in rankings, keywords, and “getting to page one.”
Meanwhile, the ground is shifting under them.
Google Search is still dominant, but even it has changed. It’s no longer just a list of blue links. It’s summarizing, interpreting, and answering.
And tools like ChatGPT and Perplexity AI aren’t ranking pages at all.
They’re answering questions.
Which creates a problem most people haven’t fully processed yet:
Users don’t need to click your website anymore to get value.
CTR is dropping. Site visits are declining.
Because the answer is already sitting in front of them.
And yet, paradoxically…
Your website has never mattered more.
Because now it’s not just competing for clicks.
It’s competing to be the source that gets cited in the answer.
What actually changed
AI search works like this:
User asks a question → system searches multiple sources → pulls the best chunks → builds an answer → cites what it trusts
If your content isn’t structured for that flow, you don’t exist.
Not “low ranking.”
Invisible.
What AI actually cares about
AI doesn’t care about your keyword density or your clever SEO hacks.
It cares if your content is:
- easy to find
- easy to understand
- easy to quote
That’s AEO (Answer Engine Optimization).
Not magic. Not a secret algorithm.
Just being usable inside an answer.
What actually works
If you do nothing else, do this:
1. Start with the answer
Don’t spend 800 words “building context.”
Bad:
“AI is transforming industries…”
Better:
“AEO is how you structure content so AI tools can find, understand, and cite it in answers.”
That’s what gets pulled.
2. Structure like a human, not a content farm
Use:
- clear headings
- short sections
- simple tables
- FAQs
AI extracts. It doesn’t patiently read your thought leadership essay.
Walls of text = ignored.
3. Be consistent about who you are
Your:
- business name
- description
- services
- location
Need to match everywhere.
If your site, LinkedIn, Reddit, and directories all say different things, AI doesn’t trust you.
No trust = no citation.
4. Keep things updated
Outdated content doesn’t get used.
Simple:
- update pages
- keep timestamps current
- maintain your sitemap
Not exciting. Still works.
5. Let crawlers access your site
If AI crawlers can’t access your content, you won’t get cited.
Blocking them and expecting visibility is… optimistic.
6. Measure the right things
Stop obsessing over rankings.
Track:
- Are you mentioned?
- Are you cited?
- Which pages show up?
If you’re not measuring AI visibility, you’re guessing.
Why you’re not cited (yet)
Most businesses don’t get cited because:
- their content is vague
- their structure is messy
- their positioning is inconsistent
AI didn’t ignore you.
It couldn’t understand you.
What you actually need (and what you don’t)
You don’t need:
- a massive content team
- expensive tools
- some “AI SEO expert” selling confidence
You need:
- 10–20 clear, structured pages
- direct answers
- consistent messaging
- basic technical setup
That’s enough to start showing up.
The technical layer (the stuff everyone ignores)
These are the files quietly determining whether you exist to AI at all.
robots.txt
Controls crawler access.
If bots can’t crawl your site, you don’t get indexed.
sitemap.xml
Tells crawlers what pages exist and what’s been updated.
No sitemap = slower discovery = less visibility.
JSON-LD (structured data)
Explains what your business, pages, and content actually are.
Without it, AI guesses. Poorly.
llms.txt
A machine-readable summary of your site for AI systems.
Not widely adopted yet, but useful for shaping how you’re interpreted.
crawlers.txt
An emerging way to control AI-specific crawlers.
Still early. Treat it as a signal, not enforcement.
Human query-based metadata
Your content should be built around real questions, not keyword fantasies.
Instead of:
“AI Solutions for SMB Efficiency Optimization”
Write:
“How can a small business use AI without hiring a developer?”
AI systems think in questions.
If you match that, you get used.
If you don’t, you get skipped.
How it all fits together
- robots.txt / crawlers.txt → controls access
- sitemap.xml → tells crawlers what exists
- JSON-LD → explains what things are
- llms.txt → suggests how to interpret it
- query-based content → makes it usable in answers
Miss one, you weaken the system.
Miss most, you disappear.
Simple test
Ask:
“What companies would you recommend for [your category] in [your region]?”
If you’re not mentioned or cited, that’s your baseline.
No opinions. Just signal.
Bottom line
SEO was about ranking pages.
AEO is about being useful inside an answer.
If your content helps AI explain something clearly, you get cited.
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